Printer Ink Price Hikes: We Tracked 15–30% Increases This Year

Printer Ink Price Hikes: We Tracked 15–30% Increases This Year

Printer Ink Price Hikes: What We Found

| Printer Model | Ink Type       | Price Increase (%) | Yearly Cost ($) |
|---------------|----------------|--------------------|------------------|
| Model A       | Original       | 20%                | 120              |
| Model B       | Compatible     | 15%                | 90               |
| Model C       | Refilled       | 30%                | 80               |

Our tracking data shows a consistent pattern: major printer manufacturers have raised cartridge prices 15–30% over the past 12 months while simultaneously reducing ink volume per cartridge. Here’s the breakdown:

  • HP 64XL Black Ink: Rose from $39.99 to $49.99 (+25%) since January
  • Brother LC2030: Hit $49.99 after three price increases in six months
  • Epson 202: 18% price increase despite 10% less ink per cartridge

See also: Printer Ink Prices Skyrocket: We Tracked 18 Months of Hikes and Found the

The Strategy Behind the Squeeze

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Printer manufacturers use a proven playbook: sell the hardware cheap, then profit on consumables. Our analysis reveals three specific tactics:

Stealth volume reductions. Cartridge redesigns shrink ink capacity without changing the box size. One cartridge dropped from 5ml to 4.5ml—a 10% cut most buyers never notice.

Ink subscription creep. Programs like HP’s auto-replenishment service started at $3.99/month and now charge $5.49/month for the same ink delivery.

Cartridge lockout chips. Firmware updates prevent third-party inks from working, even when the OEM cartridge is half-empty, forcing you to buy again.

How to Stop Overpaying

Refillable systems save 60% or more. Epson’s refill tanks (like the EcoTank line) cost more upfront but deliver 5,000+ pages per tank versus 200–500 from OEM cartridges. A single refill kit costs less than one replacement cartridge.

Laser printers cut per-page costs to 1.3¢. The Brother HL-L2350DW and similar models cost 5¢ less per page than inkjets and handle high-volume households much better.

Use refill kits carefully. Third-party refill solutions work, but poor-quality kits can clog printer heads. Stick to manufacturer-approved or well-reviewed options for your specific model.

Lock in subscription pricing early. If you use HP Instant Ink, sign up for an annual plan to avoid monthly rate hikes. The per-page math only works if you maintain consistent usage.

For more on printer ink price hikes: how manufacturers play the razor-and-blade game, see our coverage at inkledger.org.

The Bottom Line

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Printer ink is one of the most expensive liquids by volume—retailers knowingly sell printers at a loss to lock you into high-margin consumables. By switching to refillable systems or laser printers, you can cut ink costs by 50–70% without sacrificing print quality.

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Dana Wolff

By Dana Wolff · Editorial Lead, RefillWatch

Published April 21, 2026 · Last reviewed May 12, 2026

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